New UK ISP Swish Fibre Plan FTTP Broadband Rollout in South England

The increasingly crowded market for “full fibre” focused UK alternative network (altnet) ISPs has grown again today as a new start-up called Swish Fibre enters the fray. The provider intends to rollout an “ultrafast broadband” Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) network to underserved homes and businesses from 2020.

At this stage there aren’t many details, although the Manchester-based provider appears to be supported by plenty of people with industry (telecoms and fibre), consulting and investment experience. For example, the company’s Director, Alistair Goulden, was a former Director of Gigaclear and its CTO, Chris Cope, has worked for SSE (Enterprise Telecoms), UKWISPA and UK Broadband Limited etc.

The company’s CEO is also Brice Yharrassarry and he is the French founder and director of Akuo Energy, which is an international renewable energy company that delivered over 70 infrastructure projects valued at over $2.5bn. Clearly this is a new ISP with some serious clout behind its top team, albeit so far nothing much to show in terms of a network.

Speaking of a network, Swish intends to focus on “underserved towns and villages where broadband availability is poor and there is strong demand for ultrafast broadband services.” The provider claims to have identified six regions in Southern England (sadly they don’t get more specific) for their “initial deployment” in 2020, although they also aim to expand into other parts of the United Kingdom.

The ISP said they would start by building networks within a commutable distance of London and have initially identified 250,000 properties that fall into this category. Swish claims to have designed their first fibre networks and have put in place the supply chain, as well as contractual agreements, to “break ground” as early as Q4 2019.

Swish says they also intend to provide wholesale access to their duct infrastructure and will at the same time seek to harness some of Openreach’s (BT) existing cable ducts and poles in order to run their own fibre, which will be done via the Physical Infrastructure Access (PIA) product. As a result they’re seeking Code Powers from Ofcom (i.e. this speeds up deployment by reducing the number of licenses needed for street works).

Brice Yharrassarry, CEO of Swish Fibre, said:

“We are delighted to be in the final stages of receiving our Code Powers from Ofcom. Combined with our Openreach Communication Provider status this will help us accelerate our build plans.”

Without Code Powers it must obtain a licence under section 50 of the New Roads and Street Works Act 1991 for each activity, which are time-consuming and costly to obtain. For example, the provider states that over 40 licences for its initial deployment to just 1,000 premises will cost more than £40,000 without such powers. Ofcom has provisionally proposed to approve these powers and they rarely reject such requests.

One interesting point to note is that Swish said their FTTP network may also be “supplemented by wireless links,” although at the time of writing there are no further details on this side of things. We’ve seen some other ISPs use both high capacity fibre optic links to feed fixed wireless networks and also high capacity wireless links to feed fibre optic lines to homes.

By Mark Jackson
Mark is a professional technology writer, IT consultant and computer engineer from Dorset (England), he also founded ISPreview in 1999 and enjoys analysing the latest telecoms and broadband developments. Find me on Twitter, Google+, Facebook and Linkedin.

There is the basis of an interesting article here, I assume the cable companies were able to be aggregated into virgin media because the fundamental physical asset – the coax in the ground was a similar tech ? Is this the vision for the alt nets ?

Javascript must be enabled to post (most browsers do this automatically)

Privacy Notice: Please note that news comments are anonymous, which means that we do NOT require you to enter any real personal details to post a message. By clicking to submit a post you agree to storing your comment content, display name, IP, email and / or website details in our database, for as long as the post remains live.

Only the submitted name and comment will be displayed in public, while the rest will be kept private (we will never share this outside of ISPreview, regardless of whether the data is real or fake). This comment system uses submitted IP, email and website address data to spot abuse and spammers. All data is transferred via an encrypted (https secure) session.

NOTE 1: Sometimes your comment might not appear immediately due to site cache (this is cleared every few hours) or it may be caught by automated moderation / anti-spam.